News | International
27 Apr 2025 3:14
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > International

    Solomon Islands traditional dolphin hunt video sparks debate over ancient practice

    A video showing the slaughter of hundreds of dolphins in Solomon Islands has gone viral on social media, sparking heated debate in Solomon Islands and the broader Pacific about the ancient practice.


    Warning: This story depicts animal treatment that may disturb some readers.

    Jack Bakale, the church chairman from the island of Sulufou, in Solomon Islands, has a simple way of describing it.

    "For us, it's part of life," he told the ABC from his island home.

    "These events are our culture — dolphin calling, and hunting, is our inheritance from God."

    Last week, Mr Bakale's ancient cultural practice met a new type of culture: social media. 

    A video showing the killing of hundreds of dolphins on Mr Bakale's island went viral on local social media platforms, sparking heated debate in Solomon Islands and the broader Pacific.

    For some, it is a "barbaric" practice that needs to be outlawed, or at the very least regulated.

    But others, like Mr Bakale, say it is their cultural heritage, and one of the few ways they have to make a living.

    "This is passed down by our ancestors. And if god accepts it, then we practice it."

    Hunting season

    Dolphin hunting and calling in Solomon Islands' Malaita province — where the island of Sulufou sits — dates back centuries.

    Although it was phased out in the 19th Century as Christian missionaries came to the area, local historians suggest it was reintroduced in some communities mid-last century, with a handful of Solomon Islands communities now still actively hunting.

    Although it differs from community to community, hunting season generally runs from January to April, with men in traditional canoes circling the dolphins in open water — sometimes banging rocks underwater — to entice them to land.

    Estimates suggest around 1,000 to 2,000 dolphins are killed each hunting season across the Solomon Islands communities that still participate.

    The meat of the dolphin is consumed, however, the practice is used predominantly to harvest dolphin teeth used for jewellery and bride price — where a groom's family will offer the teeth as a form of compensation.

    "For us, if you give a dolphin's teeth it can stop an argument or compensate anything," Mr Bakale said.

    "But the hunting is seasonal, not all the time.

    "And [we must remember] all the communities that come together [and] take part in the harvest. So it's not just one person, or one island."

    In the video posted to social media, rows and rows of dead dolphins can be seen, with community members watching on. Some of the dolphins are still alive, flapping on land.

    The ABC has confirmed it was almost 200 that were harvested.

    'A very complex issue'

    The video of the dolphin killing has been shared thousands of times, becoming a major talking point in Solomon Islands, with some questioning the number of dolphins killed and why the practice continues.

    Solomon Islands environmentalist Lawrence Kepangi Makili has been campaigning for the regulation of dolphin hunting for decades.

    "It is a very complex issue," he told the ABC.

    "People continue to hunt dolphins in the name of cultural or custom practices, but there is no proper regulation. There should be studies done in order for us to come up with the management practices for this."

    Under Solomon Islands law, the export of live dolphins and dolphin products is illegal. But the hunting of dolphins using traditional methods is allowed, and dolphin-tooth necklaces are openly sold at markets in the capital Honiara.

    There are no specific government restrictions on the number of dolphins that can be killed.

    The Solomon Islands government was contacted for comment.

    Mr Makili said he was concerned about the image that dolphin hunting portrayed to the outside world.

    "It is really bad," he said.

    "You can see in the video they [the dolphins] knew they were going to die. That's the sad thing about these animals; they think like human beings and they sense something bad is going to happen to them."

    A complex history

    Research into the practice is limited, but a 2015 study found while the hunt did not pose a threat to the dolphin species, it did have the potential to wipe out small and isolated dolphin communities.

    The study found that "over-exploiting" local populations could make the practice unsustainable.

    In 2010, US-based conservation group The Earth Institute attempted to stop the dolphin cull by offering villagers in the communities of Fanalei and neighbouring Walande — well south of the island of Sulufou — cash in exchange for foregoing the annual hunt.

    But the agreement fell apart after divisions in the community, with the conservation group claiming the cash "vanished".

    A New York Times article published last month, written by reporters who visited Fanalei, said the annual hunt continues in the community, with dolphin teeth now worth about $3 Solomon Islands dollars each, or about 55 cents Australian.

    Now, The New York Times report said, residents were using the hunt to help them raise money to buy land and relocate to higher ground as their low-lying homes were becoming inundated by rising sea levels.

    Back in Sulufou, Mr Bakale said the dolphin hunt was a shared practice together with multiple communities in the area.

    The island of Sulufou itself is an artificial island built up by hand in a huge lagoon, known as Lau Lagoon. And although they don't have the immediate existential problems of rising sea levels seen in Fanalei, Mr Bakale said the dolphin hunt, like in Fanalei, was also their lifeline.

    "People who have been commenting about it in Solomon Islands and outside of Solomon Islands, they truly don't understand," he said.

    "They don't understand this ritual and how meaningful it is for the people of Lau for over the many, many years."

    © 2025 ABC Australian Broadcasting Corporation. All rights reserved

     Other International News
     26 Apr: Donald Trump, Volodymyr Zelenskyy meet for first time since Oval Office argument
     26 Apr: Donald Trump, Prince William and thousands of faithful: Key moments from Pope Francis's funeral
     26 Apr: What happens in Crimea since Russia's invasion and why is it contested?
     26 Apr: Nepal introduces new safety rules for Mt Everest, but guides question their effectiveness
     26 Apr: Experts' tips for creating a vertical garden for herbs and veggies
     26 Apr: The deep symbolism and ancient rituals surrounding the death of a pope
     26 Apr: Alexei Popyrin and Chris O'Connell out of the Madrid Open, Daria Kasatkina wins through
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    Hurricanes coach Clark Laidlaw feels the referees are struggling to accurately officiate scrums ahead of tonight's Super Rugby Pacific visit to the Brumbies in Canberra More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Monash IVF responds to ASX after baby bungle share price drop More...



     Today's News

    International:
    Donald Trump, Volodymyr Zelenskyy meet for first time since Oval Office argument 23:36

    Living & Travel:
    Donald Trump, Prince William and thousands of faithful: Key moments from Pope Francis's funeral 23:26

    Accident and Emergency:
    A person's been taken to hospital with serious injuries, after a crash at Ocean View speedway in Whanganui this evening 21:57

    Auckland:
    The on-ramp to Auckland's State Highway One is closed at Tristram Ave due because of a single vehicle crash 21:17

    International:
    What happens in Crimea since Russia's invasion and why is it contested? 20:57

    Environment:
    Hurricanes coach Clark Laidlaw feels the referees are struggling to accurately officiate scrums ahead of tonight's Super Rugby Pacific visit to the Brumbies in Canberra 18:57

    Environment:
    High expectations of midfielders Riley Higgins and Billy Proctor, who'll start together for the Hurricanes for the first time this season tonight against the Brumbies in Canberra 18:37

    Law and Order:
    Police are investigating a house fire in Wairoa last night 18:07

    Basketball:
    All three game threes in today's first-round NBA playoffs went the way of the home teams 17:27

    International:
    Nepal introduces new safety rules for Mt Everest, but guides question their effectiveness 17:07


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd